Adventures in Sustainable Eating

My first time on an 8-seater propeller plane was this past summer during our trip to Martha’s vineyard. It’s one of those planes where, at the airport as part of the boarding process, the attendant asks you how much you weigh in order to assess which part of the flying, mini death trap you will inhabit for the 45 most terrifying minutes of your life. Since I am prone to vomiting at the slightest hint of motion and have a thing about not going on planes where death is a real option, this wasn’t my idea of a good time. Also, due to my weight class (extra small) I was seated in the way back. But we were heading to “the vineyard” to attend a friend’s wedding (where Daniel would be cooking and I, filming), so I thought — even if this tiny plane runs out of gas in the middle of the ocean, bursts into flames and we all plunge to our deaths before being swallowed by a fish or hit by a submarine — hey, at least we tried to get there.

blog « Purple Kale KitchenworksPassover Desserts: Classic ingredients, the Purple Kale way Passover desserts traditionally lead us to flour substitutes and second-best ideas. They enforce a longing for what we can’t eat, rather than what we can.PBS VideosA personalized PBS video experience is only a few clicks away. Use one of the services below to sign-in to PBS, and you'll be able to manage videos in your Watchlist, keep track of your favorite shows, watch PBS in high definition, and much more! You've just tried to add this video to your Watchlist so you can watch it later. But first, we need you to sign-in to PBS using one of the services below.

Phare Ponleu Selpak présente L'histoire terrible mais inachevée de Norodom Sihanouk, roi du CambodgeThe project " L'histoire terrible mais inachevée de Sihanouk Roi du Cambodge" (The terrible though unfinished story of Sihanouk, King of Cambodia”) is a play by Helene Cixous written in 1985 that recounts contemporary Cambodian history starting from the country’s independence in 1953 until the collapse of the Khmer Rouge regime in 1979. Directed by Ariane Mnouchkine at Vincenne Cartoucherie in 1985, this play has been adapted between 2007 and 2011 by Georges Bigot and Delphine Cotty with 30 Cambodian actors from Phare Ponleu Selpak. The second part of the play is a joint effort between Phare Ponleu Selpak and le Théâtre du Soleil. It goes along a thorough translation and rewording work ensuring that the play is performed in Khmer language by Cambodian actors.

Food Storage and Emergency PreparednessFind resources to plan your family's emergency food storage and preparedness including 72-hour kits, calculators, food storage rotation and other emergency preparedness helps. Provident Living, Official Site of the LDS ChurchThis site focuses on the eight aspects of the Welfare Program which includes food storage and emergency preparedness as well as caring for others. LDS Church PhilanthropiesThe Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has a great philanthropies site! You can donate money online, find patterns and instructions for making clothing, quilts, hygiene kits, and many other needs. Gary E.

Permaculture EthicsThe ethics earth care, people care and fair share form the foundation for permaculture design and are also found in most traditional societies. Ethics are culturally evolved mechanisms that regulate self-interest, giving us a better understanding of good and bad outcomes. The greater the power of humans, the more critical ethics become for long-term cultural and biological survival.

Genius Recipes - Burnt Toast PodcastOur fearless Creative Director Kristen Miglore has been uncovering them in her column by the same name for five years. But do you know exactly what it takes to declare a recipe genius? Or where Kristen finds them, how she tests them, or the ones that have taken on a life of their own? This episode of Burnt Toast is dedicated to the answers to all of these questions, and many more—it's a look at the inner workings of Genius Recipes from the genius herself.Asia Finest Discussion Forum > How does wooden non-Angkor Khmer architecture differ from Thai?QUOTE(RY12 @ Apr 30 2008, 04:42 PM) [snapback]3671544[/snapback] Thanks for the links. the house below from the 4th link i think is the most different looking, i've never seen anything in thailand that looks like that. Would most people recognize this as a distinctly khmer style house? i can't read the khmer words describing it. That style does exist in Thailand, but they do not use it as much.